His prop didn't stop.The prop has to be moving for that to happen. Shoving the mixture forward with a stopped prop isn’t going to restart the engine.
His prop didn't stop.The prop has to be moving for that to happen. Shoving the mixture forward with a stopped prop isn’t going to restart the engine.
You better read again, sir.His prop didn't stop.
I counted 3 times during the descent that the force on the prop was enough to overcome the compression in the cylinders and advance.
But most of the time, the prop was dead still.
It did windmill for a while (20s maybe?) before it finally just stopped as airspeed dropped.
It's been interesting to hear everyone's point of view on this thread.Dead stick is one thing, but if I was reading correctly the OP said he "killed the engine entirely". That to me means pulling the mixture. I think that a bit nuts. Like I said, if anything went sideways he'd not be able to restart the engine in time. I know people do this in gliders all the time, but the one time I tried to fly a glider there was a dedicated field with lots of people watching out. And people crash gliders and land out all the time too.
I guess I confused someone elseYou better read again, sir.
It doesn't just apply to men.
It seems you've gained 1,000ft over the last four pages. And you also wrote this:It's been interesting to hear everyone's point of view on this thread.
It wasn't my intention to start a debate about whether it's safe/smart to do this, but rather ask the folks that do if there are any techniques they use.
That aside, let's explore this a little:
I did indeed pull the mixture.
If I pushed in the mixture, the engine would immediately restart.
I was almost 3000ft AGL, directly above a 5000ft runway, with less than a 500ft landing distance.
I could glide over 5 miles in this scenario.
I could hit anywhere in the first 90% of the runway, and be just fine.
I had 5 minutes to descend, plan, and line up for my landing.
That's a really LONG time.
I'm not a great pilot, but all things considered, there was very little risk in not making the runway.
I would have had to deliberately flown AWAY from the runway.
To those thinking it's nuts, do the evaluation...think of what could actually go wrong, and what you'd do in that situation.
I think you'll find that short of a wing falling off, it would be almost impossible have a bad outcome.
Then, after you've done that evaluation...give it a try.
You might learn something. I did.
I think all this dialog is showing that until you try in your own plane, there's no way to know how it will behave.
I did indeed pull the mixture.
If I pushed in the mixture, the engine would immediately restart.
This. I think a lot of people making the comparison don't fly gliders. Sure a glider pilot should be more comfortable than a non glider pilot in a plane with no engine, but they're not remotely the same thing.I've seen a lot of references to gliders in this thread. It's interesting that it took me a long time to get used to landing a glider. The difference is time. Gliders are designed, obviously, to be able to land with no engine and for an airplane that's just something it CAN do. In the pattern I was always in a hurry to check my altitude, airspeed, and position, but I didn't need to hurry. Gliders have such a good glide ratio compared to an average airplane, and they have such a low stall speed, that you have plenty of time and the trick is to learn to relax.
I do fly gliders. And the comparison I'm making is that the majority of things that can happen on the ground that would effect a powered plane landing will have the same effects on a glider. Sure you have more tools in the glider to cope, but I've had a plane break down in the middle of the runway while I"m landing the glider. I landed in the grass beside the strip. No big deal.You can do exactly the same in a power plane. No big deal.This. I think a lot of people making the comparison don't fly gliders. Sure a glider pilot should be more comfortable than a non glider pilot in a plane with no engine, but they're not remotely the same thing.
A modern glass ship might be able to realistically glide five or six miles from pattern altitude, or loiter for 5-10 minutes. And I think non glider pilots (I know I did) underestimate what it takes to land one. In the pattern we're flying considerably faster than best L/D and using spoilers just to get to the runway. And in normal practice the pattern is flown with plenty of margin to land anywhere on the field. In a normal approach, I could land gently in the first third or suck in the spoilers on final and fly the full length of the 6500' runway, easily sidestep to a taxiway or the grass, fly over or land behind a aircraft stopped on the runway, do a 360 in the pattern, or land off field. Normal glider ops aren't really much like this engine-out landing at all.
This IS POA.... Debate is expected.It's been interesting to hear everyone's point of view on this thread.
It wasn't my intention to start a debate about whether it's safe/smart to do this, but rather ask the folks that do if there are any techniques they use.
.
Lol, ok...… "don't save yourself boy, die like a man." Bbbbbbut the red handle is right there. "real pilots don't need that, you can always, ALWAYS, land safely in an emergency, no one ever dies in an airplane when they fly like a MAN!"
Sorry Charlie, but that's a little f'd up.
I could nose over and get it spinning...How does pushing in the mixture when the prop is stationary immediately restart the engine?
The prop accelerates between engine peak compressions based on the shape. With less momentum to make it through the compression, a low inertia prop will be stopped easier.?
I'd assume more it's overall airfoil shape and engine compression resistance
There are also theories that windmilling is worse, as the assumption is the prior is still making "lift" vs being stalled
I do fly gliders. And the comparison I'm making is that the majority of things that can happen on the ground that would effect a powered plane landing will have the same effects on a glider. Sure you have more tools in the glider to cope, but I've had a plane break down in the middle of the runway while I"m landing the glider. I landed in the grass beside the strip. No big deal.You can do exactly the same in a power plane. No big deal.
Lol, ok...… "don't save yourself boy, die like a man." Bbbbbbut the red handle is right there. "real pilots don't need that, you can always, ALWAYS, land safely in an emergency, no one ever dies in an airplane when they fly like a MAN!"
Sorry Charlie, but that's a little f'd up.
^There's a middle ground in there somewhere! More tools, tech, vigilance, is never a bad thing.. but as PIC you should always also stay ahead of the plane and keep yourself in charge. Did the Max jets have to kill people? Hell no.. if you see the trim wheel whirring away next to you, and things are starting to not feel right, take over.. grab the wheel, pull the master CB, do SOMETHING to put yourself back in control before it's aerodynamically too late to recover that close to the ground. That very same issue happened on previous flights and the jumpseater was able to resolve it. Did Boeing make a crappy design with poor (or no) training.. yes, but it didn't have to kill people. I'm sure the "faulty" Max jets are still orders of magnitude "safer" than what the 707/DC8/727 gave usI wonder if the Max jets would be grounded if self reliant men, who might have turned Otto the he!! off (or learned how to do that in the first place) were flying those aircraft
Bonanza is always the answer.This IS POA.... Debate is expected.
You should definitely not do this. I agree wholeheartedly on that.Says you. If I land my Mooney in the grass next to the runway I could very easily wind up with a prop strike if I hit a gopher hole, or even if its soft from rain. A Mooney struck the prop taxiing in the wet grass at Oshkosh. Doesn't bother a glider because they don't have propellors. And I doubt any engine is just going to kick on if you push in the mixture if your prop is stopped. It should if the prop is turning, though I'd not want to put that to the test at low altitude and low energy. That's why I think pulling the mixture in the pattern is a bad idea. But that's just my opinion. The OP obviously pulled this off. Then again, the OP pulled it off this time.
Says me, the main things to do in an engine out are stay calm and fly the airplane. No matter what, the outcome will be better if you crash under control than not under control.
Dead stick is one thing, but if I was reading correctly the OP said he "killed the engine entirely". That to me means pulling the mixture.
This IS POA.... Debate is expected.
Not contextually correct... The "not just for men" was about the OP ED.
But, I will admit to not wanting elbow pads, training wheels, and Nanny State regulations to take LIVING out of life....
I also taught my daughters (all 3 of em) to change a tire; and tried to instill in them the reason it is imperative to drive the vehicle all the way to the scene of the accident... Doing so may just save their lives.
We are all involved in an avocation (or a vocation) that has some risk. We can't all fly like Sully, or Gary L Herod. But we can continue to learn; on our own, or with an instructor.
If you consider a willingness to applaud those willing to trust their ability instead of the autopilot f'd up... I wonder if the Max jets would be grounded if self reliant men, who might have turned Otto the he!! off (or learned how to do that in the first place) were flying those aircraft.
Edited only to add the link to the ad on YouTube...Ok Charlie, wouldn't be the first post I misread, and you edited it. This post I completely agree with.
For the record, I don't think someone who trusts their ability over an autopilot f'd up, but I do consider people who denigrate using built in safety devices over flying yourself to your fatal crash f'd up. I wasn't sure if you were going there with your OP, that's why I responded, but you edited it so that's neither here nor there.
Also, I fly an airplane with a great autopilot. I'm convinced that if you attempt to use the autopilot to make up for poor skills, it will eventually eat you and your airplane for lunch. You have to be vigilant with them, and this is a great autopilot, I've flown ok autopilots and they require more vigilance.
That was Bob ****ing Hoover! If you're thinking you're as good a pilot as him you need a serious reality check.Edited only to add the link to the ad on YouTube...
Hey... Speaking of which.... Search YouTube for Bob Hoover...
He flew a twin and shut off BOTH ENGINES (or at least feathered both)!
Of course, FAAther did all they could to pull his ticket....
reminds me of what I consider one of my strangest requests to flight service. I was getting low on a cross country soaring flight and the next best airport I knew was marked closed. So I called flight service and asked "How closed is it", Is there a taxi way I can land on, A flat grassy area, or should I plan on landing in a field near by. I eventually climbed back up and was able to proceed on course to the next airport. Flight Services was response was they were just reading what I had read " it says closed due to construction"I do fly gliders. And the comparison I'm making is that the majority of things that can happen on the ground that would effect a powered plane landing will have the same effects on a glider. Sure you have more tools in the glider to cope, but I've had a plane break down in the middle of the runway while I"m landing the glider. I landed in the grass beside the strip. No big deal.You can do exactly the same in a power plane. No big deal.
While I don't think that there's value in landing with the engine off, I also don't see it as that big of a risk.
He has to keep tapping the standard style altimeter in his T-craft to show the camera that he’s climbing.
I could nose over and get it spinning...
Or I could take 2 seconds (after pushing in the mixture) and use the starter.
but did you notice at one point the needle would jump up as he tapped?
Looked that way to me casually watching it earlier.... I didn't go back to confirm.... but makes me wonder if it wasn't some spoof
Did the VS stick too?The glider in my photo originally had an altimeter shaker on it. A small motor with an offset weight attached. This is because the altimeter would stick until you moved up or down a few hundred feet. This isn't an issue in most power aircraft as there is enough engine vibration to shake the altimeter. I put a better altimeter in the glider and got rid of the shaker motor.
Brian
One man’s emergency is another man’s Tuesday.Rule 1 with simulated emergencies, don’t turn them into real emergencies.
One man’s emergency is another man’s Tuesday.
but did you notice at one point the needle would jump up as he tapped?
Looked that way to me casually watching it earlier.... I didn't go back to confirm.... but makes me wonder if it wasn't some spoof
Did the VS stick too?
Haven’t seen one for years, and judging by the frequent blank looks I get, it’s not taught much.Do people not have cutaway versions of these anymore to teach with? Granted I guess I don’t have a set either but most flight schools had them sitting in the front on a counter or similar back in the day.
Much easier to understand when you can see the mechanism.
So we have a new definition for “immediately”.I could nose over and get it spinning...
Or I could take 2 seconds (after pushing in the mixture) and use the starter.
Haven’t seen one for years, and judging by the frequent blank looks I get, it’s not taught much.
Gliders are much different than powered planes.. I have some time in them and compared to a glider, planes seem to fall like rocks when you pull the power. Incidentally though, this would make for a pretty cool actual plane to own... 53:1 glide ratio and you actually have decent TAS.. so could theoretically be used as a local cross country GA plane too..
Of course I don't think that. Make no mistake, I do have an ego. It just ain't THAT big.... I wish I had 1/50th (he!! 1/100th) the ability he had.That was Bob ****ing Hoover! If you're thinking you're as good a pilot as him you need a serious reality check.